The Islamic State’s (IS) ‘Amaq News Agency released a video showing IS fighters destroyed religious symbols inside a church in the battle-stricken city of Marawi in the Philippines and setting fire to the building.

The Islamic State's (IS) 'Amaq News Agency released a video of a fighter from the group's Damascus Province collecting a pledge of allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi from men and children in the city of al-Hajar al-Aswad.

North Baghdad Province, a division of the Islamic State (IS) in Iraq, claimed killing and wounding nearly 45 Shi'ites from the Popular Mobilization in a four-man suicide attack inside al-Taji gas plant, north of Baghdad.

A user on an English-language jihadist forum provided a scathing rebuttal to a recent call by Omar Khaled al-Khorasani, an official in Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) offshoot Jamat-ul-Ahrar, for al-Qaeda (AQ) and the Islamic State (IS) to make amends amid coalition aggression in Syria.

The Islamic State (IS) released a one-minute and eleven-second video titled "Another Message to America and its Allies" on October 3, 2014 showing the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning and introduced another hostage, Peter Edward Kassig, an American aid worker.

The Islamic State (IS) released a video showing scenes from its raid on the Tabqa military airport in Syria's ar-Raqqah government, including its marching soldiers in their underwear and mercilessly executing them.

Female jihadists within the pro-Islamic State (IS) media group al-Battar Media Foundation reactivated their division called the "al-Khansa' Media Battalion". Al-Battar had initially announced the creation of the group in December 2013, and notified about its reactivation on its Twitter account September 4, 2014.

Following the SITE Intelligence Group’s early release of the Islamic State (IS) video in which Steven Sotloff was beheaded and the executioner warned that a Briton, David Cawthorne Haines, was next, Twitter accounts of Jihadists expressed their support and confusion regarding the announcement of a British prisoner.

The Islamic State (IS) has migrated its array of official media accounts to VK, a Russian social media website similar to that of Facebook, following SITE Intelligence Group's reporting of the group's activity on Diaspora, another social media platform which removed the accounts shortly after.

The Islamic State (IS) published photo sets of its activities with orphaned children in Iraq's Ninawa province, and scenes showing the "prosperity" enjoyed by residents in the city of Mosul under the "shade of the Caliphate".

Ehsanullah Ehsan, the spokesman for Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) splinter group Jamat-ul-Ahrar, remarked that the beheading of American journalists James Wright Foley and Steven Joel Sotloff by the Islamic State (IS) has a "great message for Pakistani media".

The Islamic State (IS) published the third issue of its English magazine “Dabiq,” featuring what it called the “complete message” from executed American journalist James Wright Foley, and calling Muslims to join the group’s “Caliphate” in Iraq and Syria.

Pro-Islamic State (IS) jihadists criticized the al-Nusra Front for releasing American journalist Peter Theo Curtis, arguing that it betrayed the Muslims who are killed by U.S. drones and held in its prisons.

The Islamic State (IS) released a video on the aftermath of its “cleansing” the city of Jurf al-Sakhar in Iraq’s Babil province, showing corpses of Iraqi soldiers and the remains of destroyed vehicles.

The Islamic State (IS) beheaded a captive Peshmerga element in a video, using the grotesque action to send a message to KDP leader Masoud Barzani to end his alliance with the U.S. or other captives will be killed.

A splinter group from Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) calling itself "Jamat-ul-Ahrar" (Group of the Free ones) announced its establishment and named its officials in a video, and in a separate release, its spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan, denied that it was inspired by the Islamic State (IS) and will pledge to it.

The Free Syrian Army-run Twitter page for "Nahrwan al-Sham," an account documenting an ongoing battle in northern Aleppo against Islamic State (IS) forces, announced on August 25, 2014 the killing of two Americans IS fighters among the 43 killed in total.

After reports that the Islamic State (IS) executed a man identified as its top security official, Abu Obeida al-Maghribi, on charges of working for the British intelligence, anti-IS jihadists argued that this example demonstrates the weak faith and questionable jihadi spirit of the group's members.

Islamic State (IS) supporters are using captured American journalist Steven Sotloff, whom the group threatened to behead upon further intervention from the US, as a threat toward the US using a new hashtag, "#StevensHeadinObamasHands."

The Islamic State (IS) released a video focusing on the alleged voluntary conversion of hundreds of Yazidis to Islam in Iraq's Ninawa province, and showing Yazidis who converted, calling upon their brethren in the mountains to come down and join them.

Emboldened by the Islamic State (IS) directly challenging the United States by beheading American journalist James Wright Foley in a video, and threatening to execute another American if military intervention does not cease, jihadists taunted the U.S. and President Barack Obama, and also lauded the IS.

Islamic State (IS)-supporters took to Twitter to respond to IS's release of a video showing the beheading of U.S. journalist James Foley on August 19, 2014—collectively using the hashtags "#A_Message_to_America," based off the title of the IS video, and "#NewMessageFromISIStoUS," a modification of the recent hashtag formed in response to U.S. airstrikes, #AMessagefromISIStoUS."

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) expressed solidarity with the Islamic State (IS) regarding the U.S. airstrikes on its positions in northern Iraq and offered recommendations in dealing with enemy aircraft, and also threatened attacks against the U.S.

Demonstrating its resilience on Twitter, the Islamic State (IS) opened new accounts for its provincial divisions on two occasions within the past 48-hours, after the social networking website twice suspended them.

An alleged jihadist with the Islamic State (IS) explained the circumstantial exceptions necessary for women to aid fighters on the battlefield while encouraging them to immigrate in a series of Ask.fm answers on August 10, 2014.

The "Supporters of the Islamic State in Jerusalem" (Jama'at Ansar al-Dawlat al-Islamiyya fi Beit al-Maqdis) announced that one of its members, a "representative" to the Islamic State (IS), was killed during clashes in Syria's Homs governorate.

The jihadi media group Tarjuman al-Shami Media Productions released a video challenging the U.S. to deploy soldiers in Iraq once again, showing a series of clips from the war in Iraq and current media from the Islamic State (IS).

The Islamic State (IS) claimed credit for four car bombings in Baghdad on August 6, 2014, and published pictures of the Lebanese and Saudi fighters who carried out suicide bombings in Baghdad's al-Kadhimiyah neighborhood on August 7.

The Islamic State (IS) continues to claim victories against Kurdish Peshmerga and Asayish forces in Iraq's Ninawa province, declaring in its latest communiqué that it has taken control of the Mosul Dam, the oil-rich area of Ain-Zalah, four districts, six sub-districts, and other areas.

The Islamic State (IS) claimed reaching the border triangle between Iraq, Syria, and Turkey after securing victory in battles to open the Ninawa-Dohuk border, and reported on clashes with Kurdish security forces.

The Islamic State (IS) released a video documenting recent attacks and events in Iraq, including celebrations for the declaration of the "Caliphate," its executing Iraqi soldiers en masse, and destroying shrines.

The Islamic State (IS) claimed killing and injuring more than 150 Iraqi security and militia elements in Baghdad as a result of two suicide bombings by German and Syrian fighters, and the detonating of two car bombs.

A pro-Islamic State (IS) Yemeni cleric questioned supporters of al-Qaeda why they prefer to follow a group that seeks a Caliphate in a "fantasy world," when the IS has already established one in reality.

A message attributed to Hamaad bin Muhammad al-Amin al-Shinqiti, an individual identified as the former head of the Shariah judiciary in the Malian city of Gao, gave support to the Islamic State (IS) and its declared "Caliphate".

Jihadi ideologue Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi continues to rally against the "Caliphate" declared by the Islamic State (IS), publishing a second statement in which he attacked its establishment and urged Muslims to reject it.

In a statement attributed to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the group rejected the "Caliphate" announced by the Islamic State (IS), and urged jihadi leaders and scholars to rectify the issue of the IS and its conflict with factions in Syria.

Abtalul Islam Foundation, a jihadi media group focused on the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, and Abu Yazid Abdul Qaher Khorasani, an official in an alleged faction of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) and its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

A Pakistani jihadi group calling itself the "Caliphate and Jihad Movement" pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) and its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and also claimed credit for four attacks in Hyderabad and Karachi.

Jihadists launched a pro-Islamic State (IS) English magazine called "The Truth and the Best Explanation," and in the first issue, drew lessons from the jihad in Bosnia, and gave a eulogy for a Serbian IS fighter.

A jihadist recommended that Muslims who are unable to leave their country and join the Islamic State form small cells and carry out jihadi acts to support the group, such as kidnapping Americans and Europeans, striking Western economic interests, and attacking marine vessels.

Vilayat Dagestan, a division of the Islamic Emirate of the Caucasus (IEC), praised the conquests of the Islamic State in Iraq's Ninawa and Salah al-Din provinces, but expressed apprehension in pledging allegiance to its declared Caliphate.

The "Supporters of the Islamic State in Jerusalem" (Jama'at Ansar al-Dawlat al-Islamiyya fi Beit al-Maqdis), the alleged group that claimed credit for the killing of three high school students in the West Bank, announced the killing of two fighters in Gaza.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) congratulated the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS) for its conquests in Iraq’s Ninawa and Salah al-Din provinces and hoped that they may divert attention from the infighting in Syria and enable the problems to be solved.

In an audio message marking the onset of Ramadan, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State (IS), called upon Muslims to act against global oppression and to emigrate to the newly-declared Caliphate.

The Islamic State published a set of pictures showing a parade it held in Syria’s ar-Raqqah governorate for its declaration of an Islamic Caliphate and the naming of its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, as the Caliph Ibrahim.

The newly-branded “Islamic State” released a video of a Chilean fighter discussing the spoils taken by fighters at a border crossing between Iraq and Syria, and the aftermath of battle, and challenging the U.S. to intervene.

Abu Muhammad al-‘Adnani, the official spokesman of the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS), announced the group’s rebranding as the “Islamic State,” declaring itself a Caliphate and its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the Caliph Ibrahim.

Days after launching a campaign to direct threats to the U.S. in the event it intervenes in Iraq against the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS), jihadists on Twitter have intensified their efforts, suggesting targets and inciting Muslims to act.

A jihadist distributed an audio speech from an alleged fighter in Algeria voicing support for the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS) and praising its conquests in Iraq’s Ninawa and Salah al-Din provinces.

An alleged fighter in Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) offered support to the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS), telling its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, that he and his colleagues are Baghdad’s soldiers and will direct strikes at his request.